Indonesia and the EU have restated their stance on timber legality certification!

Both Indonesia and the EU have restated their stances on timber legality certification, with the latter insisting that their voluntary partnership on forest law enforcement governance and trade (FLEGT-VPA) will go nowhere unless the Indonesian government revives “green certification” requirements for all timber products.

EU Ambassador to Indonesia Vincent Guérend said on Monday that the EU was ready to implement the FLEGT-VPA in April next year as long as Indonesia applied its timber legality verification system (SVLK) to all of its timber products — both upstream and downstream.

Once the FLEGT-VPA between the two countries is fully operational, Indonesia’s SVLK-certified timber products will no longer need to go through due diligence processes as they will be acknowledged to be in full compliance with the bloc’s timber regulations.

“The last trade regulation exempts 15 products of wood furniture [from SVLK], and this is not in compliance [with FLEGT-VPA] [...] So, Apr. 1 is the common objective, but firstly the last exemptions have to be removed,” he said after a discussion held by the Multistakeholder Forestry Programme (MFP).

Guérend was referring to the Trade Ministry’s revised Regulation No. 97/2014 to Regulation No. 89/2015, which allows exports of as many as 15 downstream timber products without SVLK, also known as V-legal, certificates.

Exporters need only to show proof that their products’ raw materials are sourced from suppliers with V-legal documents, the new revised regulation stipulates.

Guérend said the SVLK had been recognized by both European businesses and consumers, with 40 percent of the EU’s tropical wood imports coming from Indonesia.

While having no official position on the SVLK, the US Embassy to Indonesia’s deputy chief of mission, Brian McFeeters, said that all American wood importers had to show that their imports were legally based in their countries of origin, as required by the US’ 2008 Lacey Act.

__________________________

“It’s not that we discriminate [with products]. We just want to provide ease of business for our downstream industry.”

McFeeters said the SVLK had become a tool to help Indonesian timber exporters in complying with American laws. He estimated that wood imports from Indonesia to the US amounted to as much as US$284 million last year.

Trade Ministry director for exports of agriculture and forestry products NurlailaNur Muhammad, said, meanwhile, that the revised regulation was aimed at boosting the local downstream industry, including small and medium-sized furniture exporters.

“It’s not that we discriminate [with products]. We just want to provide ease of business for our downstream industry,” she said, adding that furniture and woodcraft exports were expected to hit $5 billion in 2019. She said the revised regulation would still oblige the upstream timber industry to obtain V-legal certificates.

Separately, business players expressed different opinions on the revised regulation.

BarianTio, a sales representative from local furniture exporter Rimba Central Management Group, said, however, that the SVLK had become an additional cost for his company as it had to spend Rp 40 million ($2,915.5) a year on the certification.

“Not to mention that we also need to acquire more globally recognized legality certifications from the Tropical Forest Trust [TFT] and the Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) to secure our markets, such as the US and Japan,” he said. –